Search Constraints

You searched for: Date 1936 Remove constraint Date: 1936
Number of results to display per page

Search Results

Rene Henry (L) and an unidentified woman in Frank Henry's store in South Charleston.
Rene Henry Jr. with parents Lillian and Rene Henry in front of their home.
Roosevelt stands in background while being introduced to crowd.
Franklin D. Roosevelt pictured standing at podium on Baltimore and Ohio train car.
Lucy Satterfield, wife of Harry Satterfield, at a trip to Pikes Peak in Colorado.  The Satterfield's lived in Fairmont, W. Va.
Cars drive through the flooded roads while people watch from the bridge above.
Crane ship docked at the Navy yard.
Crew members look out to the sea from the deck.
A crew tends to the ship.
View looking at the 16" guns.
The motor boats were used to transport enlisted men to and from shore.
One of the two scout planes on the U.S.S. West Virginia sits on the stern deck.
Crew members fire the 5" guns.
The admiral is greeted with a band and guard as he boards the ship.
The plane sits on the battleship's deck.
Replicas of the HMS Bounty and HMS Pandora.
The U.S.S. West Virginia crew organized on the deck.
Furlong during a visit to the U.S.S. West Virginia.
The ships used in the "Mutiny on the Bounty" motion picture.
A boat speeds across the sea while the U.S.S. West Virginia lurks in the background.
Two sailors on the deck observe the gunfire.
A sailor stands in the boat while it's being raised by the battleship's crane. The "punt" boat was used only to paint the sides of the ship. The boat pictured on the far left is a whale boat, which is used as a life boat and is also used in racing. The boat on the right  is called a "racing cutter" and is also used as a life boat and in cutter racing.
An unidentified crew member leans against the 5" gun and port.
A crew consisting of a cox, and engineer and two extra men are pictured on the stem of the boat, which was used to take enlisted men ashore. The boat carries about 125 men and is 50 feet long.
Kneeling in the front row, from left to right, is PFC Meihold; Private Grewohl; PFC Dunning; and Private Hayes.Standing in the back, from left to right, is Corporal Pop Winn Coxswain; PFC Rottier; Private Hill; CPL Marquez; Private Davis; Private McIntyre; PFC Shumacher; and 1st Lieutenant Davis.
Crew members walk around the deck while the ship is at sea.
Each link in the anchor chain weighs 100 lbs. and is one foot long. The chain falls through the hawse pipes.
McIlwain was part of the 7th Division Marine Detachment and a crew member on the U.S.S. West Virginia.
Pictured in the front row, from left to right, is John Osbourne, Frank Maddy, Mayo Ballenge, John Scott, Harry Bragg, Howard Bostic, Alfred Hutchinson, Joe Mann, and Jim Ballengee.In the second row, from left to right, is Burdette Hutchinson, Billy Scott, Eugene  Meadows, Dean Lowry, Robert Hutchinson, Percy Halloran, Junior Taylor, and Coach Roy C. Pollick.
Mr. & Mrs. Truman Johnson with their Sunday school class pictured.
Grett Shelton and Alva Shelton pictured. A bus can be seen in the background.
Digging and preparing for the construction site of the dam over the Bluestone River.
People pictured from left to right.
People pictured from left to right.
Loomis watches as two cats walk through the yard.
Loomis sits in the doorway of his shop located on Front Street.
Loomis at work in his shop located on Front Street. Loomis carved most of the stones that grace the graves of pioneer railroaders that settled in Hinton in its infancy. Loomis died in 1936.
Print number 1120. Monongalia Faculty on stage after performance of "Lelawala".
Print number 758e.
Print number 758d.
Print number 698.
Print number 699.
Print number 541b. Display is a model of Coopers Rock State Forest.
Presidential candidate Landon speaks to the crowd gathered on the platform.
West Virginia University football player. Print number 203e.
West Virginia University football coach. Print number 203d.
West Virginia University football player. Print number 203b.
West Virginia University football player. Print number 203a.

55. Atty

Caption on back of picture reads: "Mother of Henrietta Amos of Jones Shops."
Possibly part of the Vestal or Shenandoah Bloomery, the first ironworks west of the Blue Ridge Mountains. William Vestal operate the ironworks built on his land, from 1742 to 1760.
A Georgian style mansion built in 1840 by Bushrod C. Washington, grand nephew of George Washington.
Also known as the Vinton Farm, the house was built in 1840.
View from the N.W. of the log house.
Originally built in 1750, Beverley has been remodeled several times. Near Rippon, West Virginia.
Marshall Burns outbuilding viewed from S.W.
A raumbild-verlag (stereocard) of the Stadion of Olympiade, Hous of German sports. This area was not badly damaged during the war, and was taken over in 1945 as the headquarters of the British military contingent in Berlin. Returned to German control in the mid-1990s, much of this area remains today as it did in 1936, still a sports center.
A raumbild-verlag (stereocard) of the Stadion of Olympiade. This area was not badly damaged during the war, and was taken over in 1945 as the headquarters of the British military contingent in Berlin. Returned to German control in the mid-1990s, much of this area remains today as it did in 1936, still a sports center.
Slave quarters and outbuilding viewed from the South East. Also known as the R. Lucas House.
North and West walls of main courtroom on second floor. John Brown tried and convicted here in 1859. The building badly damaged during the Civil War and eventually restored.
North wall of the court room on the second floor. The building badly damaged during the Civil War and eventually restored.
East side and north end. John Brown tried and convicted here in 1859. The building was badly damaged during the Civil War and eventually restored.
West side and (north) back end. John Brown tried and convicted here in 1859. The building was badly damaged during the Civil War and eventually restored.
The "back House' shown in the is photograph was built in ca. 1737 by Richard Morgan, and grandson, Daniel Morgan built the "Great House" ca. 1800.
John Worthington built the original structure in 1735. Dr. John Briscoe remodeled the house to it's present day appearance in 1780. View from the south-west.
Handhewn clapboard house was built ca. 1751. Peter Burr was first cousin to United States Vice President Aaron Burr.
Handhewn clapboard house was built ca. 1751. Peter Burr was first cousin to United States Vice President Aaron Burr.
Located near Leetown and built in 1835 by Federal Judge Henry St. George Tucker. View from the south-east.
Built by John Thornton Augustine Washington, grand-nephew of George Washington, in 1825. View from the south-east.
Built by Samuel Washington, younger brother of George Washington, in 1770. View from the south-east.
Built by Samuel Washington, younger brother of George Washington in 1770. Viewed from the north-west.
Named Falling Spring and located near Shepherdstown, West Virginia. The structure was built by Jacob Morgan in 1841. Viewed from the south-east.
View of the Horatio Gates home from the north-east.
Outbuilding which is probably a meat house on a large farm, viewed from the south-west.
Also known as the Fairfax Grant Stock Farm, built ca. 1775.
View of outbuilding from south-east.
View from the southwest.
Interior of the house, west end of north wall of room to right of "?". Also known as Shepard Hall, the structure was built in 1798 by Moses Shepard.
Participants march in file though a crowd of onlookers.
This is the school building that was built to combine Cool Spring and Mt. View schools. No longer standing.
"The Virginian 102" was part of the Virginian Railway spur line that transported bituminous coal from southern West Virginia, 1909 to 1959.
"Cowboy" Loye Pack and family, including his 2 year old son, Gerald Malcolm Pack. Performed at WWVA Wheeling or WMMN Fairmont.
Harriet Lyon Jewett from a photo accompanying her April 1936 WVU Alumni reminiscence of life as one of WVU's first female students. Enlarged from Sallie Norris Showalter's copy of the WVU Alumni. Donor: Norris' grandaughter Sallie Showater Barnes.Harriet Eliza Lyon, a transfer student from Vassar College was WVU's first woman graduate. The only woman in the fourteen member Class of 1891, she won the honor of being valedictorian. Born in Fedonia, New York, she moved to Morgantown with her family in 1867 when her father, Franklin Smith Lyon, accepted a position as one of WVU's first professors. After graduating from the University, Harriet Lyon returned to Fredonia and married Franklin Jewett, a professor of science at the Fredonia Normal school. She raised four children and was active as a musician, singer, composer, and community leader. Harriet Lyon was a grandniece of Mary Lyon, the founder of Mt. Holyoke College.
Camp friends and others in the classroom.